Updating read voltages

ABSTRACT

A method performed at a data storage device includes adjusting a first read voltage and a second read voltage to form sets of read voltages. First representations of data are read from a logical page in the non-volatile memory according to the sets of read voltages. The first representations of the data correspond to multiple values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage. The first representations of the data are stored in a memory and second representations of the data are generated based on the first representations. A value of the first read voltage is selected based on syndrome weights corresponding to the second representations.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a continuation-in-part of and claims priority to U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 13/967,145, filed Aug. 14, 2013, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/829,646, filed May 31, 2013. The contents of each of these applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.

FIELD OF THE DISCLOSURE

The present disclosure is generally related to determining read voltages for a non-volatile memory.

BACKGROUND

Non-volatile data storage devices, such as embedded flash memories, universal serial bus (USB) flash memory devices, or removable storage cards, have allowed for increased portability of data and software applications. Flash memory devices can enhance data storage density by storing multiple bits in each flash memory cell. For example, Multi-Level Cell (MLC) flash memory devices can provide increased storage density by storing 3 bits per cell, 4 bits per cell, or more.

Storing multiple bits of information in a single flash memory cell typically includes mapping sequences of bits to states of the flash memory cell. For example, a first sequence of bits “110” may correspond to a first state of a flash memory cell and a second sequence of bits “010” may correspond to a second state of the flash memory cell. After determining that a sequence of bits is to be stored into a particular flash memory cell, the particular flash memory cell may be programmed to a state (e.g., by setting a threshold voltage) that corresponds to the sequence of bits.

Once memory cells in a data storage device have been programmed, data may be read from the memory cells by sensing the programmed state of each memory cell by comparing the cell threshold voltage to one or more read voltages. However, the sensed programming states can sometimes vary from the written programmed states due to one or more factors, such as data retention and program disturb conditions.

SUMMARY

Accuracy of reading data stored in a data storage device may be improved by updating a set of read voltages used to read the stored data in order to reduce an estimated or actual bit error rate associated with reading the stored data. One or more read voltages may be adjusted while one or more other read voltages are held constant to generate multiple trial sets of read voltages. Multiple representations of the stored data are generated and correspond to reading the stored data using the multiple trial sets. Error correction coding (ECC) related information associated with the multiple representations may be used to select an updated value of the one or more read voltages. Updating of the read voltages may continue by holding the updated value constant while adjusting another read voltage.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a particular illustrative embodiment of a system including a data storage device configured to generate updated read voltages based on ECC related information of multiple representations of data resulting from holding a read voltage constant while adjusting another read voltage;

FIG. 2 is a diagram of a particular embodiment of components of the data storage device of FIG. 1 configured to store storage element state data in a controller memory and to use the stored state data to emulate performing read operations;

FIG. 3 is a flow chart of a particular embodiment of a method of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device of FIG. 1;

FIG. 4 is a flow chart of another particular embodiment of a method of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device of FIG. 1;

FIG. 5 is a flow chart of another particular embodiment of a method of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device of FIG. 1;

FIG. 6 is a flow chart of another particular embodiment of a method of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device of FIG. 1;

FIG. 7 is a flow chart of another particular embodiment of a method of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device of FIG. 1;

FIG. 8 is a block diagram of another particular illustrative embodiment of a system including a data storage device configured to generate updated read voltages based on ECC related information of multiple representations of data;

FIG. 9 is a block diagram illustrating a particular embodiment of a mapping converter that may be included in the data storage device of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8;

FIG. 10 is a block diagram illustrating a particular embodiment of a mapping checker that may be included in the data storage device of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8;

FIG. 11 is a diagram that illustrates a particular embodiment of components that may be included in the data storage device of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8 and also illustrates an example of interpolation and peak detection that may be applied to syndrome values by the data storage device of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8;

FIG. 12 is a flow chart of a particular embodiment of a method of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8; and

FIG. 13 is a flow chart of another particular embodiment of a method of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Referring to FIG. 1, a particular embodiment of a system 100 includes a data storage device 102 coupled to an accessing device such as a host device 130. The data storage device 102 is configured to generate an updated set of read voltages 146 based on ECC related information of multiple representations of data. The multiple representations of data result from adjusting a read voltage while holding another read voltage constant to read the data from a non-volatile memory 104.

The host device 130 may be configured to provide data, such as user data 132, to be stored at the non-volatile memory 104 or to request data to be read from the non-volatile memory 104. For example, the host device 130 may include a mobile telephone, a music player, a video player, a gaming console, an electronic book reader, a personal digital assistant (PDA), a computer, such as a laptop computer, notebook computer, or tablet, any other electronic device, or any combination thereof. The host device 130 communicates via a memory interface that enables reading from the non-volatile memory 104 and writing to the non-volatile memory 104. For example, the host device 130 may operate in compliance with a Joint Electron Devices Engineering Council (JEDEC) industry specification, such as a Universal Flash Storage (UFS) Host Controller Interface specification. As other examples, the host device 130 may operate in compliance with one or more other specifications, such as a Secure Digital (SD) Host Controller specification as an illustrative example. The host device 130 may communicate with the non-volatile memory 104 in accordance with any other suitable communication protocol.

The data storage device 102 includes the non-volatile memory 104 coupled to a controller 120. For example, the non-volatile memory 104 may be a NAND flash memory. The non-volatile memory 104 includes a representative group 106 of storage elements, such as a word line of a multi-level cell (MLC) flash memory. The group 106 includes a representative storage element 108, such as a flash MLC cell. For example, the data storage device 102 may be a memory card, such as a Secure Digital SD® card, a microSD® card, a miniSD™ card (trademarks of SD-3C LLC, Wilmington, Del.), a MultiMediaCard™ (MMC™) card (trademark of JEDEC Solid State Technology Association, Arlington, Va.), or a CompactFlash® (CF) card (trademark of SanDisk Corporation, Milpitas, Calif.). As another example, the data storage device 102 may be configured to be coupled to the host device 130 as embedded memory, such as eMMC® (trademark of JEDEC Solid State Technology Association, Arlington, Va.) and eSD, as illustrative examples. To illustrate, the data storage device 102 may correspond to an eMMC (embedded MultiMedia Card) device. The data storage device 102 may operate in compliance with a JEDEC industry specification. For example, the data storage device 102 may operate in compliance with a JEDEC eMMC specification, a JEDEC Universal Flash Storage (UFS) specification, one or more other specifications, or a combination thereof.

The controller 120 is configured to receive data and instructions from and to send data to the host device 130. The controller 120 is further configured to send data and commands to the non-volatile memory 104 and to receive data from the non-volatile memory 104. For example, the controller 120 is configured to send data and a write command to instruct the non-volatile memory 104 to store the data to a specified address. As another example, the controller 120 is configured to send a read command to the non-volatile memory 104.

The controller 120 includes an ECC engine 122 that is configured to receive data to be stored to the memory 104 and to generate a codeword. For example, the ECC engine 122 may include an encoder 124 configured to encode data using an ECC encoding scheme, such as a Reed Solomon encoder, a Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem (BCH) encoder, a low-density parity check (LDPC) encoder, a Turbo Code encoder, an encoder configured to encode one or more other ECC encoding schemes, or any combination thereof. The ECC engine 122 may include a decoder 126 configured to decode data read from the memory 104 to detect and correct, up to an error correction capability of the ECC scheme, any bit errors that may be present in the data.

The controller 120 includes a read voltage update engine 140 that is configured to generate the updated set of read voltages 146 based on ECC related information received from the decoder 126. To illustrate, a first graph 190 shows a histogram or distribution of storage element threshold values having clusters representing states Erase (Er), A, B, C, D, E, F, and G, in a 3-bit per cell (3BPC) multi-level cell (MLC) implementation. A set of read voltages VA, VB, VC, VD, VE, VF, and VG define boundaries between the states and may be used to determine a state of a storage element. For example, applying the read voltage VA to a word line of the group 106 activates storage elements having threshold voltages less than VA while storage elements having threshold voltages greater than VA are not activated.

Some storage elements originally set to the Er state may experience a threshold voltage shift that causes the threshold voltages of the storage elements to be greater than VA. Reading these storage elements using VA results in bit errors because the storage elements are read as having a “110” value (corresponding to state A) rather than having a “111” value (corresponding to the Er state). Similarly, some storage elements originally programmed to state A may experience a threshold voltage shift that causes the threshold voltages of the storage elements to be less than VA. Reading these storage elements using VA also results in bit errors because the storage elements are read as having a “111” value rather than having a “110” value.

The read voltage update engine 140 may be configured to adjust VA, such as by sequentially assigning VA to a first trial value 191, a second trial value 192, a third trial value 193, a fourth trial value 194, and a fifth trial value 195, without adjusting the other read voltages VB-VG. Each resulting set of read voltages may be used to read the data from the group 106, and the resulting data may be decoded by the decoder 126. ECC related information from the decoder 126 may be used to select one of the trial values 191-195 that results in a lowest estimated or actual number of bit errors in the data (as compared to the estimated or actual number of bit errors corresponding to the other trial values 191-195). Another example may include an SLC memory with only two states (Er and A), and the adjusting of VA in this case may be performed by sequentially assigning VA to a first trial value 191, a second trial value 192, a third trial value 193, a fourth trial value 194, and a fifth trial value 195. Each resulting set of read voltages may be used to read the data from the group 106, and the resulting data may be decoded by the decoder 126. ECC related information from the decoder 126 may be used to select one of the trial values 191-195 that results in a lowest estimated or actual number of bit errors in the data (as compared to the estimated or actual number of bit errors corresponding to the other trial values 191-195). More generally, the ECC related information may be used to select one of the trial values that results in a minimal (or maximal) detected value of an ECC related metric corresponding to the ECC related information. For example, an objective may be to determine a read threshold which minimizes the bit error rate. As another example, an objective may be to minimize ECC power, latency, throughput, or any other ECC related metric. Also it is not necessary to decode the codewords for determining an “optimal” read voltage. Other ECC related information may be used without fully decoding (e.g. computing the number of unsatisfied ECC parity-check equations, also known as syndrome weight, without full decoding, or BER estimation without decoding, as non-limiting examples).

After selecting one of the trial values for VA, the read voltage update engine 140 may select another read voltage to adjust. A second graph 196 illustrates multiple trial values of VE that may each be used to read the data from the group 106. The resulting data may be decoded at the decoder 126 and a trial value selected for VE based on comparisons of actual or estimated errors. Each read voltage of the updated set of read voltages 146 may be updated by the read voltage update engine 140 in a similar manner as described with respect to VA.

During operation, a determination may be made to perform a read voltage update. The determination to perform a read voltage update may be based on a total number of write/erase (W/E) cycles at the non-volatile memory 104 exceeding a W/E threshold, the time that elapsed since the block including the group of storage elements 106 has been programmed (or any other indication or metric that is correlated to the time) exceeding a threshold, a number of read operations in a block that includes the group 106 exceeding a read threshold, or an average number of errors detected by the decoder 126 exceeding an error threshold, as illustrative, non-limiting examples.

The read voltage update engine 140 may select one or more read voltages for adjustment in a first iteration of a read voltage update process. The group 106 may store data in a page-by-page, non-interleaved manner, such that a first ECC codeword is stored in a first logical page of a physical page of the group 106 (e.g., a ‘lower’ page corresponding to the least significant bit stored in each storage element of the physical page). A second ECC codeword may be stored in a second logical page of the physical page (e.g., a ‘middle’ page corresponding to the middle bit stored in each storage element of the physical page). A third ECC codeword may be stored in a third logical page of the physical page (e.g., an ‘upper’ page corresponding to the most significant bit stored in each storage element of the physical page).

As illustrated in the first graph 190, VA may be selected as a first read voltage to be adjusted. As illustrated in the second graph 196, VE may be selected as a second read voltage to be adjusted. Because the lower page bit value stored in a storage element is “1” for storage elements in state Er and in states E, F, and G and is “0” for storage elements in states A, B, C and D, the lower page can be read by performing sense operations at the Er-A boundary (VA) and at the D-E boundary (VE).

The read voltage update engine 140 may select the first trial value 191 and may generate a first set of read voltages 170 for determining the first read voltage (VA). The first set of read voltages 170 may be represented as the set {first trial value 191, VE}. A first representation 180 of data may be read from the group 106 using the first set of read voltages 170 and received at the controller 120. The first representation 180 may be provided to the decoder 126.

The read voltage update engine 140 may select the second trial value 192 and generate a second set of read voltages for determining the first read voltage (VA). The second set of read voltages may be represented as {second trial value 192, VE}. The read voltage update engine 140 may also generate a third set of read voltages {third trial value 193, VE}, a fourth set of read voltages {fourth trial value 194, VE}, up to an Nth set of read voltages 172 of {fifth trial value 195, VE} (e.g., N=5) for determining the first read voltage. Each generated set of read voltages 170-172 may be sent to the non-volatile memory 104 and used to read a corresponding representation 180-182 that is provided to the decoder 126.

The decoder 126 may generate first ECC related information 142 responsive to the multiple representations 180-182. The ECC related information may also be generated by a separate designated ECC related function (e.g., a separate hardware engine) and not necessarily by the ECC decoder 106. The read voltage update engine 140 may receive or otherwise access the first ECC related information 142 to determine or estimate a number of errors or a bit error rate (BER) for each of the representations 180-182. Alternatively, or in addition, the read voltage update engine 140 may determine any other ECC related metric.

To illustrate, when the decoder 126 fully decodes each of the representations 180-182, the decoder 126 may generate information including a number of corrected errors. The read voltage update engine 140 may compare the number of corrected errors resulting from reading the data with each of the sets 170-172 to select the particular set 170-172 having the lowest identified number of corrected errors of the sets 170-172. The trial value of VA for the selected set (e.g., the third trial value 193) may be used as an updated value of VA.

In other implementations, latency associated with fully decoding each of the representations 180-182 may be avoided by estimating a bit error rate (BER) or number of errors without fully decoding the representations 180-182. For example, the decoder 126 may generate a syndrome value indicating a number of parity check equations that are unsatisfied for each of the representations 180-182. The syndrome for each of the representations 180-182 generally indicates a relative amount of errors in each of the corresponding representations 180-182. The syndrome may be generated using dedicated hardware circuitry with reduced latency as compared to full decoding. The first ECC related information 142 may include syndrome values for each of the representations 180-182 and the read voltage update engine 140 may search and/or sort the syndromes to identify a lowest estimated BER of the representations 180-182 and to select a corresponding trial value of VA.

As another example, a length of time corresponding to a decoding operation may be used to estimate a number of errors or BER. To illustrate, representations of data having a greater number of errors may generally require longer decoding (e.g., more iterations for convergence, longer error location search processing, etc.) than representations of data having fewer errors. The decoder 126 may be configured to fully decode a first representation of data and to store the decoding time for the first representation. For each subsequent representation of data, the decoder 126 may terminate decoding if the decoding time exceeds the stored decoding time, or may update the stored decoding time if the decoding time is less than the stored decoding time. The first ECC related information 142 may indicate one or more decoding times or relative decoding times of the representations 180-182 to enable the read voltage update engine 140 to identify a shortest of the decoding times of the representations 180-182 and to select a corresponding trial value of VA.

As another example, a number of bit values that change during a decoding operation may be used to estimate a number of errors or BER. To illustrate, during an iterative decoding process, representations of data having a greater number of errors may experience more “bit flips” prior to convergence than representations of data having a lesser number of errors. The decoder 126 may be configured to track a number of bit flips for each representation 180-182 and to indicate resulting counts of bit flips in the first ECC related information 142 to enable the read voltage update engine 140 to identify a lowest count of bit flips of the representations 180-182 and to select a corresponding trial value of VA.

As another example, at least a portion of the data stored in the group 106 may be reference data. The portion of each of the representations 180-182 that corresponds to the reference data may be compared to the reference data to identify errors. For example, the decoder 126 may include circuitry configured to compare a portion of each representation 180-182 to the reference data and to generate a count of detected bit errors. The resulting counts may be provided in the first ECC related information 142 to enable the read voltage update engine 140 to identify a lowest of the counts of reference data errors of the representations 180-182 and to select a corresponding trial value of VA.

After selection of a trial value of VA (e.g., the third trial value 193), the read voltage update engine 140 may select a first trial value 161 of VE, as illustrated in the second graph 196, and may generate a first set of read voltages 174 for determining the second read voltage (VE). The first set of read voltages 174 may be represented as the set {third trial value 193, first trial value 161 of VE}. A first representation 184 of data may be read from the group 106 using the first set of read voltages 174 and received at the controller 120. The first representation 184 may be provided to the decoder 126.

The read voltage update engine 140 may select a second trial value 162 of VE and generate a second set of read voltages for determining VE. The second set of read voltages may be represented as {third trial value 193, second trial value 162 of VE}. The read voltage update engine 140 may also generate a third set of read voltages {third trial value 193, third trial value 163 of VE}, a fourth set of read voltages {third trial value 193, fourth trial value 164 of VE}, up to an Nth set of read voltages 176 of {third trial value 193, fifth trial value 165 of VE} (e.g., N=5) for determining VE. Each generated set of read voltages 174-176 may be sent to the non-volatile memory 104 and used to read a corresponding representation 184-186 that is provided to the decoder 126.

The decoder 126 (or a separate designated ECC related function) may generate second ECC related information 144 for each of the representations 184-186 that is provided to or accessible to the read voltage update engine 140. As described with respect to the first ECC related information 142, the second ECC related information 144 may include one or more counts of corrected errors, syndrome values, indications of decoding times, counts of changed bit values, or indications of similarity to reference data, as illustrative, non-limiting examples. The second ECC related information 144 enables the read voltage update engine 140 to select a trial value of VE (e.g., the third trial value 163 of VE) that reduces an actual or estimated number of errors or BER.

The read voltage update engine 140 may update the values of VA and VE in the updated set of read voltages 146 after selecting trial versions of VA and VE as described above. However, in other implementations, the read voltage update engine 140 may repeat the VA, VE selection process by selecting a next value of VA using trial values of VA with the selected value of VE and selecting a next value of VE using the most recently selected value of VA with trial values of VE. The process may be repeated iteratively until a convergence criterion is achieved. For example, the convergence criterion may be achieved when an estimated BER does not decrease between successive iterations of the VA, VE selection process.

The other read voltages may be updated in a manner similar to VA and VE. For example, the upper page may be read using VC and VG. The group 106 may be read using trial values of VC while holding VG constant, followed by adjusting VG while holding VC constant. As another example, the middle page may be read using VB, VD, and VF. The group 106 may be read using trial values of VB while holding VD and VF constant, followed by adjusting VD while holding VB and VF constant, followed by adjusting VF while holding VB and VD constant.

By adjusting a selected read voltage while holding other read voltages constant, changes in error counts or BERs (actual or estimated) or any other ECC related metric (such as latency, throughput, power, etc.) resulting from changes in the selected read voltage may be identified and an “optimal” value of each of the read voltages associated with the fewest errors (or lowest decoding latency, or lowest decoding power, etc.) may be selected.

Although the non-volatile memory 104 is described as a three bits per storage element (3BPC) MLC, in other implementations the non-volatile memory 104 may store a single bit per storage element (SLC), two bits per storage element (2BPC), four bits per storage element (4BPC), or any other number of bits per storage element. Although in the examples described above, five trial values of each read voltage are illustrated (e.g., N=5), in other implementations a number of trial values may be less than five or more than five.

Although the group 106 is described as storing multiple codewords in a page-by-page, non-interleaved manner, in other implementations one or more ECC codewords may be interleaved across multiple logical pages. Reading multiple (or all) of the logical pages of a physical page may include performing sense operations using all of the read voltages VA-VG, rather than using a reduced set corresponding to a single logical page, to read a single codeword from the group 106. Each read voltage may be individually varied and a trial value selected based on ECC related information for the single ECC codeword.

In other implementations, a number of sensing operations may be reduced and an amount of time to complete selection of read voltages may be reduced by storing data at the controller 120 (e.g., in a memory 152, such as a random access memory (RAM) in the controller 120 or a memory accessible to the controller 120) that corresponds to data read from the non-volatile memory 104 that corresponds to a particular read voltage.

For example, as illustrated in the first graph 190, reading the lower page includes sensing at VA and VE. Conventionally, reading the lower page of the group 106 may include first sensing the group 106 using VA and storing the first sensing results in a latch at the non-volatile memory 104. Next, the group 106 may be sensed using VE and second sensing results may be stored in another latch at the non-volatile memory 104. The first sensing results (e.g., “D1”) and the second sensing results (e.g., “D2”) may be combined using a bit-wise logical operation, such as NOT (D1 XOR D2), where NOT indicates a logical inverse operation and XOR indicates an exclusive-OR operation.

However, when adjusting VA while VE is held constant, the second sensing results (D2) do not change. These results may be stored in the latch at the non-volatile memory 104 or at the memory 152 and combined with the first sensing results for each trial value of VA, reducing a total number of sensing operations that are performed.

Table 1 illustrates, for each of the states Er-G, a first row of values that result from sensing using VA (e.g., D1), a second row of values that result from sensing using VE (e.g., D2), and a third row of results of a NOT-XOR operation of the first row and the second row that corresponds to a lower page reading. The values in the third row are logically equivalent to the results attained by reading the lower page of the group 106.

TABLE 1 Er A B C D E F G Sense at VA = 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sense between Er-A Sense at VE = 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 Sense between D-E NOT-XOR the two reads = 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 Lower Page read

An implementation of updating read voltages may include reading at VE once (to generate the second row of Table 1) and storing results of the reading (e.g. at a latch of the non-volatile memory, or at a memory of the controller (e.g. RAM 152). An additional reading of the group 106 may be performed using VA only (i.e., without sensing using VE) to generate the first row of Table 1. A NOT-XOR operation may be performed to generate data corresponding to the third row of Table 1 for each storage element in the group 106. The results of the NOT-XOR corresponding to lower page reads at multiple VA values and at a fixed VE value may be stored in a latch in the non-volatile memory 104 or in the memory 152, as illustrative examples.

The group 106 may be sensed using various trial values of VA (e.g., the trial values 191-195) and a NOT-XOR operation of each sensing result and the stored data may be performed to generate a lower page read result for each trial value of VA. As a result, each of the representations 180-182 may be generated without repeating the VE sense operation for each of the representations 180-182. The representations 180-182 may be provided to the decoder 126 to generate the first ECC related information 142 to be processed by the read voltage update engine 140.

In some implementations, selection of read voltages may be performed using a “coarse” phase using a first voltage difference between trial values (e.g., a first step size) to select a “coarse” value for one or more read voltages. The coarse phase may be followed by a “fine” phase using a second voltage difference between trial values (e.g., a second step size smaller than the first step size). The fine phase may include performing a scan of trial values around the coarse value that is selected during the coarse phase.

In some implementations, selection of read voltages may be performed using another two-phase process, where an initial set of read thresholds are determined during the first phase. For example, the initial set of read thresholds may be determined by finding local minima of a cell voltage distribution (CVD). To illustrate, lowest points between each of the nodes of the first graph 190 may be determined to select an initial set of read voltages. A second phase following the first phase may include generating multiple trial sets of read voltages and selecting a trial value of a particular read voltage based on ECC related information, such as described with respect to the read voltage update engine 140.

FIG. 2 illustrates another embodiment of updating read voltages that may be performed by the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1 and includes a graphical depiction 202 of cell distributions for states (Er, A, . . . G), read voltages (e.g., voltages VA, VB, . . . VG), and candidate read voltages (e.g., trial values) for read voltages (e.g., voltages VA-2ΔR, VA-ΔR, VA, VA+ΔR, VA+2ΔR). To illustrate, the first trial value 191 of FIG. 1 may correspond to the candidate voltage VA-2ΔR, the second trial value 192 may correspond to the candidate voltage VA-ΔR, and the third trial value 193 may correspond to the candidate voltage VA, etc. A first table 204 illustrates a mapping of each voltage interval between adjacent trial read voltages to a set of six bits.

A read voltage update process may include reading a group of storage elements (e.g., the group 106 of FIG. 1) one time using each of the multiple (e.g., 35) trial read values (e.g., five trial values for each of seven read voltages). A result of the sensing may be encoded as illustrated in the first table 204 and stored in the memory 152 of FIG. 1 as a table 210 including a 6-bit value for each storage element that is sensed (e.g., to occupy six pages of RAM). To illustrate, the entry in the table 210 for the storage element having index 0 has a value “111001”, corresponding to a threshold voltage in the voltage range between VA-ΔR and VA. The 6-bit value may be used to emulate a result of sensing the storage element at any of the 35 candidate voltages. For example, the storage element with index 0 has a “1” value for candidate voltages that are less than or equal to VA-ΔR and has a “0” value for candidate voltages that are greater than or equal to VA.

Rather than reading the non-volatile memory 104 of FIG. 1 with multiple sets of read voltages, such as the sets 170-172, the read voltage update engine 140 may access the table 210 to generate multiple representations of data that emulate results of reading storage elements using different combinations of candidate reading voltages. The representations of data may be selected and provided to the ECC engine 122 to produce ECC related information, and the ECC related information may be evaluated to select candidate voltages corresponding to lowered actual or estimated errors or BER, as described with respect to FIG. 1.

To illustrate, if the 6 bit read value (corresponding to the table 210) of a storage element having index 0 is 111001, then an emulated reading using a first set of read voltages {VA-2ΔR, VE} or a second set of read voltages {VA-ΔR, VE} results in a representation of stored data having a first bit sequence beginning with ‘0’ that may be provided to the ECC engine 122 to generate first ECC related information. An emulated reading of the same storage element using a third set of read voltages {VA, VE} results in a second bit sequence beginning with ‘1’ that may be provided to the ECC engine 122 to generate second ECC related information. The fifth storage element (having index 4) has a changed value as compared to the first bit sequence because the 6-bit value “111101” in the table 210 indicates that a threshold voltage for the fifth storage element is between VA-2ΔR and VA-ΔR. Therefore an emulated reading of this storage element using the first set of read voltages {VA-2ΔR, VE} results in a third bit sequence beginning with ‘0’, but reading with the second set of read voltages {VA-ΔR, VE} results in a third bit sequence beginning with ‘1’ that may be provided to the ECC engine 122.

By storing the sensing information in the memory 152 (e.g., in the table 210), a number of sensing operations may be reduced as compared to embodiments that perform sensing of storage elements for every trial set of read voltages. An amount of data transferred from the non-volatile memory 104 to the controller 120 may also be reduced as compared to embodiments where multiple representations of data are read from the non-volatile memory 104 for every read voltage. Estimating an error count or BER may be performed digitally in the controller 120 at relatively high speed and low power as compared to sensing operations and data transfer at the non-volatile memory 104. The controller 120 may include dedicated hardware circuitry to perform a portion or all of the read voltage update process as described with respect to FIG. 2.

To summarize, in an embodiment, a three step procedure may be performed. A first step may involve reading the group of storage elements 106 (requiring a minimal number of sensing operations) and transferring the read results to the controller memory 152 (requiring a minimal number of page transfers). In a second step dedicated hardware circuitry may read the internal controller memory 152 to generate (e.g., sequentially) for each of the multiple candidate read thresholds an emulated read result on which it will compute the ECC related information or metric. The second step may be performed solely within the controller, at high speed as compared to performing multiple read operations to generate the read results. In a third step, the best candidate read thresholds may be selected based on the ECC related information or metrics generated during the second step, such as selected as to minimize (or maximize) the ECC related metric.

FIG. 3 depicts an embodiment of a method 300 of updating a set of read voltages. The method 300 may be performed in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory, such as the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1.

The method 300 includes iteratively adjusting a first read voltage without adjusting a second read voltage to form first sets of read voltages, at 302. For example, the read voltage update engine 140 may adjust the read voltage VA to have the multiple trial values 191-195 to form the sets 170-172 of read voltages. As another example, iteratively adjusting the first read voltage may include generating first values of the first read voltage according to a first step size and, after identifying one of the first values based on a portion of the first ECC related information corresponding to the first values, generating a second set of values of the first read voltage according to a second step size that is smaller than the first step size.

Multiple first representations of data are read from the non-volatile memory according to the first sets of read voltages, at 304. For example, the multiple first representations of the data may include the representations 180-182 corresponding to the sets 170-172 of read voltages of FIG. 1. To illustrate, the first representation 180 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the first set 170, and the Nth representation 182 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the Nth set 172 of read voltages.

A first value of the first read voltage is selected based on first ECC related information from an error correction coding (ECC) decoder, at 306. The first ECC related information is responsive to the multiple first representations of the data. For example, the first ECC related information may correspond to the first ECC related information 142 of FIG. 1. As an example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a count of errors detected by the ECC decoder. As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a syndrome value (that may be generated by an ECC decoder or may be generated by other components (e.g., dedicated circuitry) other than an ECC decoder). As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a length of time of a decoding operation. As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a count of bit values that change during a decoding operation. As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a similarity of reference data to each of the multiple first representations of the data (e.g., based on counts of differences, or bit errors, between the first representations and the reference data).

The second read voltage is iteratively adjusted without adjusting the first read voltage to form second sets of read voltages, at 308. For example, the read voltage update engine 140 may adjust the read voltage VE to have the multiple trial values illustrated in the second graph 192 of FIG. 1 to form the sets 174-176 of read voltages.

Multiple second representations of the data from the non-volatile memory are read according to the second sets of read voltages, at 310. For example, the multiple second representations of the data may include the representations 184-186 corresponding to the sets 174-176 of read voltages of FIG. 1. To illustrate, the first representation 184 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the first set 174, and the Nth representation 186 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the Nth set 176 of read voltages.

A second value of the second read voltage is selected based on second ECC related information from the ECC decoder, at 312. The second ECC related information responsive to the multiple second representations of the data. For example, the second ECC related information may correspond to the second ECC related information 144 of FIG. 1.

An updated set of the read voltages that includes the first value and the second value is stored, at 314. For example, the updated set of the read voltages may correspond to the updated set 146 of FIG. 1.

The method 300 may further include determining whether a convergence condition has been satisfied by comparing the first ECC related information to the second ECC related information. For example, the convergence criterion may correspond to determining whether a count of errors or BER (actual or estimated) decreased for the second read voltage as compared to the count of errors or BER for the first read voltage. The convergence criterion may be satisfied when no reduction in errors or BER occurs as a result of updating a read voltage, and updating of the read voltages may end. In response to determining that the convergence condition has not been satisfied, a second updated set of the read voltages may be based on third ECC related information resulting from representations of the data according to third sets of the read voltages with varying values of the first read voltage. For example, when the convergence criterion has not been satisfied (e.g., the count of errors or BER after selecting the second value of the second read voltage at 312 is less than the count of errors or BER after selecting the first value of the first read voltage at 308), processing may return to 302 where a next sets of read voltages are generated.

FIG. 4 depicts an embodiment of a method 400 of updating a set of read voltages. The method 400 may be performed in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory, such as the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1.

The method 400 includes iteratively adjusting a first read voltage of a set of read voltages and reading multiple first representations of first partial data from a logical page of the non-volatile memory, at 402. Each of the first representations of the first partial data is read according to a corresponding value of the first read voltage. For example, the first representations may correspond to sensing the group 106 using different trial values 191-195 of the read voltage VA without also sensing the group 106 using the read voltage VE.

Multiple first representations of data corresponding to the logical page are generated by combining each of the first representations of first partial data with second partial data, at 404. For example, data corresponding to sending the group 106 may be stored and combined with each of the first representations, such as via a NOT-XOR operation as described with respect to Table 1.

A value of the first read voltage is selected based on first ECC related information, at 406. The first ECC related information is responsive to the multiple first representations of the data. For example, the first ECC related information may correspond to the first ECC related information 142 of FIG. 1.

After determining the second partial data, generating the multiple representations may be performed using fewer sense operations as compared to the method 300 of FIG. 3. For example, a first representation of the data may be from the logical page of the non-volatile memory using a first value of the first read voltage and a second read voltage (e.g., using VA and VE). A second representation of the partial data may be read from the first logical page using the first value of the first read voltage without using the second read voltage (e.g., sensing only using VA and not using VE). The second partial data of the logical page may be generated by applying a logical operation to the first representation and to the first partial data, such as the NOT-XOR operation described with respect to Table 1. A reduced number of sensing operations may reduce a time to complete updating the read voltages.

FIG. 5 depicts an embodiment of a method 500 of updating a set of read voltages. The method 500 may be performed in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory, such as the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1.

The method 500 includes generating a set of read voltages based on detecting valleys in a cell voltage distribution (CVD), at 502. The CVD corresponds to a group of storage elements of the non-volatile memory. For example, the valleys may correspond to local minima in the first graph 190 of FIG. 1.

A first read voltage of the set of read voltages is iteratively adjusted without adjusting a second read voltage of the set of read voltages to form first sets of read voltages, at 504. For example, the read voltage update engine 140 may adjust the read voltage VA to have the multiple trial values 191-195 to form the sets 170-172 of read voltages. As another example, iteratively adjusting the first read voltage may include generating first values of the first read voltage according to a first step size and, after identifying one of the first values based on a portion of the first ECC related information corresponding to the first values, generating a second set of values of the first read voltage according to a second step size that is smaller than the first step size.

Multiple first representations of data are read from the group of storage elements according to the first sets of read voltages, at 506. For example, the multiple first representations of the data may include the representations 180-182 corresponding to the sets 170-172 of read voltages of FIG. 1. To illustrate, the first representation 180 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the first set 170, and the Nth representation 182 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the Nth set 172 of read voltages.

A first value of the first read voltage is selected based on first ECC related information from an error correction coding (ECC) decoder, at 508. The first ECC related information is responsive to the multiple first representations of the data. For example, the first ECC related information may correspond to the first ECC related information 142 of FIG. 1. As an example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a count of errors detected by the ECC decoder. As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a syndrome value. As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a length of time of a decoding operation. As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a count of bit values that change during a decoding operation. As another example, the first ECC related information may correspond to a similarity of reference data to each of the multiple first representations of the data (e.g., based on counts of differences, or bit errors, between the first representations and the reference data).

The second read voltage is iteratively adjusted without adjusting the first read voltage to form second sets of read voltages, at 510. For example, the read voltage update engine 140 may adjust the read voltage VE to have the multiple trial values illustrated in the second graph 192 of FIG. 1 to form the sets 174-176 of read voltages.

Multiple second representations of the data are read from the group of storage elements according to the second sets of read voltages, at 512. For example, the multiple second representations of the data may include the representations 184-186 corresponding to the sets 174-176 of read voltages of FIG. 1. To illustrate, the first representation 184 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the first set 174, and the Nth representation 186 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the Nth set 176 of read voltages.

A second value of the second read voltage is selected based on second ECC related information from the ECC decoder, at 514. The second ECC related information is responsive to the multiple second representations of the data. For example, the second ECC related information may correspond to the second ECC related information 144 of FIG. 1.

An updated set of the read voltages that includes the first value and the second value is stored, at 516. For example, the updated set of the read voltages may correspond to the updated set 146 of FIG. 1.

The method 500 may further include determining whether a convergence condition has been satisfied by comparing the first ECC related information to the second ECC related information. For example, the convergence criterion may correspond to determining whether a count of errors or BER (actual or estimated) decreased for the second read voltage as compared to the count of errors or BER for the first read voltage. The convergence criterion may be satisfied when no reduction in errors or BER occurs as a result of updating a read voltage, and updating of the read voltages may end. In response to determining that the convergence condition has not been satisfied, a second updated set of the read voltages may be based on third ECC related information resulting from representations of the data according to third sets of the read voltages with varying values of the first read voltage. For example, when the convergence criterion has not been satisfied (e.g., the count of errors or BER after selecting the second value of the second read voltage at 312 is less than the count of errors or BER after selecting the first value of the first read voltage at 308), processing may return to 302 where a next sets of read voltages are generated.

FIG. 6 depicts an embodiment of a method 600 of updating a set of read voltages. The method 600 may be performed in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory, such as the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1.

Multiple storage elements of the non-volatile memory are sensed using a set of candidate read voltages to generate sensing data, at 602. The set of candidate read voltages includes a first group of candidate read voltages corresponding to a first read voltage and a second group of candidate read voltages corresponding to a second read voltage. For example the group 106 of storage elements of FIG. 1 may be sensed according to the candidate voltages illustrated in the graphical depiction 200 of FIG. 2.

The sensing data is stored in a memory that is accessible to the controller, at 604. For example, the sensing data may be stored in the memory 152, such as a controller RAM.

Multiple representations of data stored in the group of storage elements are generated based on the sensing data, at 606. Each of the multiple representations of the data emulates results of reading the storage elements using a different combination of candidate reading voltages. For example, the multiple representations of the data may include the emulated readings at various candidate voltages for VA (and a constant value of VE) as illustrated in FIG. 2.

Values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage are selected based on ECC related information from an error correction coding (ECC) decoder, at 608. The ECC related information is responsive to the multiple representations of the data. For example, the ECC related information may correspond to the first ECC related information 142 of FIG. 1.

The sensing data may be stored according to a table having a multi-bit value corresponding to each of the storage elements, each of the multi-bit values corresponding to a distinct threshold voltage region. For example, the table 210 of FIG. 2 illustrates a 6-bit value for each storage element indicating a threshold voltage region for each storage element, such as the value “111101” for the storage element with index 4, indicating a threshold voltage in voltage region extending from VA-2ΔR to VA-ΔR.

The sensing data may be transferred from the non-volatile memory to the controller a single time. For example, the memory 152 may be a controller random access memory (RAM) as illustrated in FIG. 1. By performing a single sensing at each of the candidate voltages and a single transfer of the sensing data to the controller, an amount of data to be transferred between the non-volatile memory and the controller, and an amount of time to perform read voltage updates, may be reduced as compared to the method 300 of FIG. 3.

FIG. 7 depicts an embodiment of a method 700 of updating a set of read voltages. The method 700 may be performed in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory, such as the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1.

The method 700 includes iteratively adjusting a read voltage to form sets of read voltages, at 702. For example, the read voltage update engine 140 may adjust the read voltage VA to have the multiple trial values 191-195 to form the sets 170-172 of read voltages. As another example, in an SLC implementation, a single read voltage VA may be used and each set of read voltages may include a distinct trial value of VA.

Multiple representations of data are read from the non-volatile memory according to the sets of read voltages, at 704. For example, the multiple representations of the data may include the representations 180-182 corresponding to the sets 170-172 of read voltages of FIG. 1. To illustrate, the first representation 180 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the first set 170, and the Nth representation 182 may correspond to reading the group 106 using the Nth set 172 of read voltages.

A value of the read voltage is selected based on ECC processing information, at 706. The ECC processing information is responsive to the multiple representations of the data. The ECC processing information may be acquired without fully decoding, or prior to fully decoding, all of the multiple representations of the data. As an example, the ECC processing information may correspond to a syndrome value (that may be generated by an ECC decoder or may be generated by other components (e.g., dedicated circuitry) other than an ECC decoder). As another example, the ECC processing information may correspond to a length of time of a decoding operation. As another example, the ECC processing information may correspond to a count of bit values that change during a decoding operation. As another example, the ECC processing information may correspond to a similarity of reference data to each of the multiple first representations of the data (e.g., based on counts of differences, or bit errors, between the first representations and the reference data).

FIG. 8 depicts an embodiment of a system 800 including the host device 130 coupled to the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1. The data storage device 102 is configured to send multiple sets of read voltages to read a logical page of data from the non-volatile memory 104. The controller 120 changes values of each read voltage of each set of read voltages to read multiple different representations of the same logical page, such as a representative lower logical page 820, a representative middle logical page 822, or a representative upper logical page 824 stored in the group of storage elements 106.

For example, a first set of read voltages 870 includes a first value of a first read voltage and a first value of a second read voltage (e.g., the set {first trial value 191 of VA, first trial value 161 of VE}). A first representation 880 of the data may be read from the logical page (e.g., the lower logical page 820) using the first set of read voltages 870. Values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage are adjusted to form a second set of read voltages to read additional representations of the data from the logical page. An Nth set of read voltages 872 (e.g., the set {fifth trial value 195 of VA, fifth trial value 165 of VE} where N=5) may be sent to the non-volatile memory 104 to read an Nth representation 882 of the data from the logical page using the Nth set of read voltages 872. The multiple representations 880-882 of the data from the logical page are stored in the memory 152 as stored representations 810.

The controller 120 includes a read simulator 802 that is configured to generate simulated representations of the data based on the stored representations 810. For example, the read simulator 802 may be configured to determine a threshold voltage range of each storage element that stores data of the logical page (e.g., the storage element 108) and to generate a bit value of the data stored in the storage element during a simulated read of the logical page. To illustrate, the bits with bit index 0 in each of the stored representations 810 correspond to a single storage element, the bits with bit index 1 correspond to another storage element, etc. The bit values for each bit index may be arranged according to a first mapping 892 that maps threshold voltage regions to bit sequences.

For example, the storage elements may be programmed to have a threshold voltage distribution similar to the distribution depicted in a graph 890. Each of eight states (Er, A, B, C, D, E, F, and G) can represent a three-bit data sequence as described with respect to FIG. 1. A “lower” logical page can have a 1′ value for storage elements in states Er, E, F, or G and a ‘0’ value for storage elements in states A, B, C, or D. The lower logical page can be read by sensing the storage element using the read voltage VA and the read voltage VE and performing a logical combination of the sensing results (e.g., sense(VA) OR NOT(sense(VE)).

A storage element having a threshold voltage less than the first trial voltage 191 (corresponding to voltage region “1” in the first mapping 892) is read as having a “1” bit value in the lower logical page in each of the stored representations 810, forming a bit sequence “11111” for the depicted example where N=5. A storage element having a threshold voltage between the fifth trial voltage 195 of VA and the first trial voltage 161 of VE (corresponding to voltage region “6” in the first mapping 892) is read as having a “0” bit value in the lower logical page in each of the stored representations 810, forming a bit sequence “00000”. A storage element having a threshold voltage greater than the fifth trial voltage 165 of VE (corresponding to voltage region “11” in the first mapping 892) is read as having a “1” bit value in the lower logical page in each of the stored representations 810, forming a bit sequence “11111”.

Storage elements having threshold voltages that are outside of regions 1, 6, and 11, and that are in any of voltage regions 2-5 and 7-10 as depicted in the first mapping 892, have a bit value in the lower logical page that changes based on which set of read voltages 870-872 is used to read the storage element. For example, a storage element having a threshold voltage between the first trial voltage 191 of VA and the second trial voltage 192 of VA is read as storing a lower logical page value of “0” when sensed using the first trial voltage 191 of VA and has a “0” bit in the first representation 880. However, the storage element is read as storing a lower logical page value of “1” when sensed using the other trial values 192-195 of VA and has a “1” bit in the 2nd-5th representations, resulting in a bit sequence of “11110” according to the first mapping 892. As another example, for a storage element having a threshold voltage in region 9 (between the third trial voltage 163 and the fourth trial voltage 164 of VE), the threshold voltage of the storage element may be represented by the bit sequence “11100” according to the first mapping 892. As illustrated in the first mapping 892, bit sequences for adjacent voltage regions may differ by a single bit, resulting in a Gray code encoding.

The read simulator 802 may be configured to read the bit sequence corresponding to a particular storage element from the stored representations 810 and to emulate, based on the voltage region corresponding to the bit sequence, the result of reading the lower logical page bit of the storage element using a particular trial value 191-195 for VA and a particular trial value 161-165 for VE. In the illustrated example, although the controller 120 sends five sets 870-872 of read voltages and receives five representations 880-882 of the data of the logical page, the read simulator 802 can use the stored representations 810 to simulate up to 25 different read operations (i.e., (5 values of VA)×(5 values of VE)). For example, because the stored representations 810 represent a threshold voltage region of each storage element that stores the data of the logical page, the read simulator 802 can select sets of read voltages and determine, based on the stored representations 810, a logical value of each storage element based on the storage element's threshold voltage region relative to the read voltages of the selected sets of read voltages. The read simulator 802 may be configured to generate multiple representations 814 of the data that simulate results of multiple read operations using different read voltages and to provide the multiple representations 814 to the ECC engine 122 for decoding.

The decoder 126 of the ECC engine 122 is configured to decode each of the multiple representations 814 received from the read simulator 802 and to generate ECC related information, such as a syndrome weight, decoding time, bit flip count, error count, etc., as described with respect to FIG. 1. In a particular implementation, the read voltage update engine 140 is configured to receive a syndrome weight for each of the multiple representations 814 and to select updated read voltages based on which of the representations 814 results in a lowest syndrome weight. A syndrome weight of a representation of an ECC codeword may be determined without fully decoding the codeword and may indicate how many errors are in the representation. In general, a representation having a larger syndrome weight has more bit errors than a representation having a smaller syndrome weight.

Although one or more of the multiple representations 814 may include a number of errors exceeding a correction capacity of the decoder 126, some or all of the representations 814 may be error-free or may contain errors in sufficiently low amounts to be fully correctable by the decoder 126. ECC results of the representations 814 may be compared to determine a “best” set of read voltages among multiple sets of read voltages that each generates correctable data. The read voltage update process is therefore not limited to “heroics” scenarios that attempt to generate correctable data by changing read voltages in response to a default set of read voltages resulting in uncorrectable errors. For example, the read voltage update process may be used according to a scheduled or routine housekeeping process (e.g., based on a count of program/erase (P/E) cycles, based on an error rate exceeding an update threshold that is less than a decoding capacity limit, based on one or more other block or die health metrics, or any combination thereof).

During operation, the controller 120 may send the multiple sets 870-872 of read voltages to the non-volatile memory 104 and receive the representations 880-882 from the non-volatile memory 104. The controller 120 may store the received representations 880-882 in the memory 152 as the stored representations 810. The read simulator 802 may access the stored representations 810 to generate the representations 814 in a digital domain (as compared to sensing storage elements in an analog domain in the non-volatile memory 104).

The read simulator 802 may provide the representations 814 to an input of the decoder 126, and the decoder 126 may at least partially decode each of the representations 814 to generate ECC related information such as syndrome weight. The read voltage update engine 140 may select the updated set of read voltages 146 based on comparisons of the ECC related information from the decoder 126, such as described with respect to FIG. 1. For example, the set of read voltages used to generate a representation 814 that results in ECC related information indicating a fewest number of detected or estimated errors (as compared to the other representations 814 generated based on other sets of read voltages) may be selected as the updated set of read voltages 146. The controller 120 may use the updated set of read voltages 146 in subsequent accesses of a lower logical page from the group of storage elements 106. Because storage elements in a same physical region of the non-volatile memory 104 may have similar characteristics and exhibit similar wear, the updated group of read voltages 146 may also be used to accurately read other storage elements in the non-volatile memory 104, such as storage elements in a same word line as the group of storage elements 106 and/or in the same erase block as the group of storage elements 106. In some implementations, the updated group of read voltages 146 may be used to read other storage elements in other blocks in the same plane as the group of storage elements 106. In some implementations, the updated group of read voltages 146 may be used to read other storage elements in other blocks and/or planes of the same die as the group of storage elements 106.

In some implementations, the read simulator 802 may generate the representations 814 to represent every possible combination of the read voltages, such as twenty-five representations for five trial voltages of each of two read voltages, or 125 representations for five trial voltages of each of three read voltages. In other implementations, the read simulator 802 may generate the representations 814 according to a process that varies one read voltage at a time. For example, the read simulator 802 may first generate five representations using different trial values of VA without varying VE, and the read simulator 802 may generate another five representations using different trial values of VE and using the trial value of VA that resulted in fewest errors (or lowest syndrome weight, shortest decode time, fewest bit flips during decoding, etc.).

Thus, the data storage device 102 can use results of five read operations to test up to twenty-five data representations and select the read voltages that result in the fewest errors without fully decoding any of the twenty-five data representations. Latency due to data transfer from the non-volatile memory 104 to the controller 120 is reduced as compared to a device that reads all tested data representations from a memory to compare error rates. Latency due to error detection and correction may also be reduced by using syndrome weights as compared to a device that fully decodes each tested data representation.

Although the system 800 is described as using five sets of read voltages 870-872 and generating up to twenty-five representations of the data for comparison, in other implementations other numbers of sets of read voltages and simulated representations may be used. For example, an implementation using three trial voltages for each read voltage may send three sets of read voltages to read a page from the memory and generate nine representations of the page for comparison using the decoder 126. An implementation using ten trial voltages for each read voltage may send ten sets of read voltages to read a page from the memory and generate one hundred representations of the page for comparison using the decoder 126.

Although the example of operation of the system 800 describes reading a lower logical page using the VA and VE read voltages, other pages may be read using other read voltages. To illustrate, in a 2-3-2 implementation, an “upper” logical page may be read using the VC and VG read voltages, and a “middle” logical page may be read using the VB, VD, and VF read voltages. Reading the middle logical page may also include performing an additional sense operation to distinguish between lower-voltage states and higher-voltage states that may produce the same bit sequence based on the representations 880-882. In other implementations, other logical page configurations may be used, such as a 1-2-4 implementation that uses VD to read the lower logical page, VB and VF to read the middle logical page, and VA, VC, VE, and VG to read the upper logical page. Although a three bits per cell (3BPC) configuration is described, other implementations may use a two bits per cell configuration or a configuration that stores more than three bits per cell.

FIG. 9 depicts an example of a mapping converter 902 that may be included in the data storage device 102 of the system 800 to re-map the stored representations 810 of FIG. 8. The mapping converter 902 is configured to receive an input bit sequence 910 and to generate an output bit sequence 912 that corresponds to a re-mapped version of the input bit sequence 910. The output bit sequence 912 may include fewer bits than the input bit sequence 910, and the resulting re-mapped data 920 may be stored into the memory 152 to replace the stored representations 810. The resulting re-mapped data 920 may use less space in the memory 152 than the stored representations 810 of FIG. 8.

The input bit sequence 910 may correspond to a bit value read from a storage element using different sets of read voltages, such as bit values corresponding to a single bit index in each of the representations 880-882. The input bit sequence 910 may be read from the stored representations 810 and processed by the mapping converter 902 to generate the output bit sequence 912. The mapping converter 902 may sequentially process each bit sequence corresponding to each bit index in the stored representations 810 to generate a set of output bit sequences to form the re-mapped data 920. The re-mapped data 920 may be stored into the memory 152 to replace the stored representations 810. For example, the re-mapped data 920 may be stored in the memory 152 after the re-mapped data 920 is generated. After storing the re-mapped data 920 in the memory 152, the stored representations 810 may be erased from the memory 152 and/or indicated as invalid data. As another example, the re-mapped data 920 may overwrite a portion of the stored representations 810 and a non-overwritten portion of the stored representations 810 may be erased from the memory 152 and/or indicated as invalid data.

Table 2 provides an example of a mapping between values of the input bit sequence 910 and values of the output bit sequence 912 for a six-bit representation of a middle logical page in a 2-3-2 implementation as described with respect to FIG. 8 (i.e., each representation corresponds to a different trial value of VB, VD, and VF, plus another bit indicating a sensing at VD). Each row of Table 2 corresponds to a distinct range of threshold voltages represented as a 6-bit Gray code value and a re-mapped O-bit binary value.

TABLE 2 Input Bit Sequence Output Bit Sequence (Gray) (Binary) 111111 0000 111101 0001 111001 0010 110001 0011 100001 0100 000001 0101 000011 0110 000111 0111 001110 1000 011110 1001 111110 1010 111100 1011 111000 1100 110000 1101 100000 1110 000000 1111

In some implementations, the mapping conversion from the first mapping of the input bit sequence 910 to the second mapping of the output bit sequence 912 may be performed via a table lookup operation at a lookup table 904 of the mapping converter 902. For example, the lookup table 904 may include a separate table or set of entries for an upper logical page, a middle logical page, and a lower logical page. The input bit sequence 910 may be provided as an input to the lookup table 904, an entry corresponding to the input bit sequence 910 may be located, and a re-mapped value may be read out from the located entry as the output bit sequence 912. Alternatively, or in addition, the mapping converter 912 may include a mapping circuit 906 that is configured to perform one or more logical operations on the bits of the input bit sequence to generate the output bit sequence 912. As an example, referring to Table 2, the mapping circuit 906 may generate the most significant bit of the output bit sequence 912 for the lower logical page by applying a logical NOT operation to the least significant bit of the input bit sequence 910 for the lower logical page. The mapping circuit 906 may determine each of the other bits of the output bit sequence 912 by performing logical operations on one or more bits of the input bit sequence 910.

By re-mapping the stored representations 810 into the re-mapped data 920, the original representations 880-882 received from the non-volatile memory 104 may be erased from the memory 152 and data corresponding to the threshold voltage regions of the read storage elements may be stored in the memory 152 using less storage space than storing the original representations 880-882 received from the non-volatile memory 104. A size and/or cost of the controller memory 152 may therefore be reduced as compared to storing the original representations 880-882 without remapping because the re-mapped data 920 can be stored in a smaller amount of memory than the original representations 880-882. In addition, a complexity of the read simulator 802 may be reduced by operating on less-complex remapped bit sequences as compared to operating on a more complex Gray encoding of bit sequences.

FIG. 10 illustrates an example of a mapping checker 1002 that may be included with the mapping converter 902 of FIG. 9. Because one or more bits of an input bit sequence 1010 may be erroneous, a valid re-mapped bit sequence may not exist. For example, in an implementation of the mapping converter 902 that uses the lookup table 904, an entry may not exist in the lookup table 904 for an input bit sequence 1010 that is invalid.

The mapping checker 1002 may compare the input bit sequence 1010 to a table of valid words 1004. To illustrate, the table of valid words 1004 may correspond to the lookup table 904 and the mapping checker 1002 may determine whether any entry in the table of valid words 1004 corresponds to the input bit sequence 1010. In response to determining that the input bit sequence 1010 does not correspond to any entry in the table of valid words 1004 (i.e., is not a valid bit sequence according to the first mapping of voltage ranges to bit sequences), a distance calculator 1006 may compute a “distance” between the input bit sequence 1010 and one or more valid bit sequences of the first mapping. The mapping checker 1002 may provide the valid bit sequence that is determined to have the least distance to the input bit sequence 1010 as an output bit sequence 1012.

For example, the distance calculator 1006 may compute a number of bit differences between the input bit sequence 1010 and a particular valid bit sequence as the distance. To illustrate, the distance calculator 1006 may compute a Hamming distance. In other implementations, the distance calculator 1006 may determine one or more other distances, such as by weighting bit differences in one bit location as more significant than differences in another bit location to generate a “weighted” distance metric. If two or more valid bit sequences have a same distance from the input bit sequence 1010, the mapping checker 1002 may randomly select one of the valid bit sequences as the output bit sequence 1012 or may select one of the valid bit sequences according to one or more selection criteria. For example, if read noise appears more often with one of the valid bit sequences than with another valid bit sequence, the mapping checker 1002 may select the valid bit sequence associated with greater read noise.

By applying the mapping checker 1002 to detect and correct invalid input bit sequences, the mapping converter 902 may more accurately re-map the stored representations 810 in the presence of read noise or other sources of errors. The mapping checker 1002 enables error handling without including an entry in the lookup table 904 for every possible valid and invalid bit sequence, reducing a size of the lookup table 904. In implementations where the mapping converter 902 includes the mapping circuit 906, a complexity of the mapping circuit 906 may be reduced as compared to a complexity associated with mapping circuitry configured to detect and handle erroneous input bit sequences.

FIG. 11 depicts an interpolation filter 1102 that may be included in the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8. The interpolation filter 1102 may be configured to generate interpolation data 1112 based on a received set of syndrome weights 1110. The interpolation data 1112 may correspond to interpolated syndrome weights and may provide a finer “resolution” of syndrome values between trial values of read voltages. A peak detector 1114 may process the interpolation data 1112 to detect a peak (e.g., a highest value or a lowest value) in the interpolation data 1112, and a read voltage value corresponding to the detected peak may be provided as an output read voltage 1116.

A first graph 1140 illustrates a first set of syndrome weights 1121-1125 plotted as a function of read voltage. For example, the read voltage may be VA, and the first syndrome weight 1121 may correspond to the syndrome weight determined by the decoder 126 for a representation of lower logical page data read using the first trial voltage 191. The second syndrome weight 1122 may correspond to the data read using the second trial voltage 192, the third syndrome weight 1123 may correspond to the data read using the third trial voltage 193, the fourth syndrome weight 1124 may correspond to the data read using the fourth trial voltage 194, and the fifth syndrome weight 1125 may correspond to the data read using the fifth trial voltage 195.

The first set of syndrome weights may be processed by an upsampler 1104 of the interpolation filter 1104 to generate upsampled data 1105. A second graph 1160 illustrates an example of the upsampled data 1105. Although the second graph 1160 illustrates that the upsampler 1104 inserts six O-valued syndrome weights (e.g., a representative set of six O-valued syndrome weights 1162) between each of the syndrome weights 1121-1125, in other implementations any other number of entries may be inserted between each of the syndrome weights 1121-1125.

The upsampled data 1105 may be processed by a filter, such as a low-pass filter (LPF) 1106 to generate the interpolation data 1112. As illustrated in a third graph 1180, the interpolation data 1112 has an interpolated syndrome weight 1182 corresponding to a “peak” (a lowest syndrome value) at an interpolated read voltage, and the interpolated read voltage is between the third read voltage (of the third syndrome weight 1123) and the fourth read voltage (of the fourth syndrome weight 1124). The peak at the interpolated syndrome weight 1182 may be detected by the peak detector 1114 and the interpolated read voltage corresponding to the peak may be output as the output read voltage 1116.

The interpolation filter 1102 may be chosen from a group of multiple interpolation filters based on one or more characteristics of the data to be interpolated (e.g., the set of syndrome weights 1110). For example, a different interpolation filter may be selected for input data that has an outlier, such as a single syndrome weight having a significantly lower value than the rest of the syndrome weights in the input data. Such “corner cases” that may cause inaccuracies if interpolated by a conventional interpolation filter may be identified and one or more filters may be included in the data storage device 102 to interpolate syndrome data that matches a particular corner case. For example, interpolation filters may be implemented that ignore consecutive maximum values or that constrain the output to be no lower than the lowest input value.

By applying the interpolation filter 1102 to the set of syndrome weights corresponding to a particular read voltage, an updated value of the read voltage may be determined with an enhanced resolution as compared to the resolution of the trial values of the read voltage. As a result, a value of the read voltage may be determined using fewer sets of read voltages to read data from the non-volatile memory 104 as compared to reading the data at the enhanced resolution, reducing latency of performing a read voltage update operation and/or improving accuracy of the updated read voltage.

FIG. 12 illustrates a particular embodiment of a method 1200 of updating a set of read voltages. The method 1200 may be performed in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory. For example, the method 1200 may be performed in the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8.

A first read voltage and a second read voltage are iteratively adjusted to form sets of read voltages, at 1202. Each of the sets of read voltages includes a first value of the first read voltage and a second value of the second read voltage. For example, the sets of read voltages may correspond to the sets of read voltages 870-872 of FIG. 8. An adjustment of the second read voltage may be a function of an adjustment of the first read voltage. To illustrate, the function may correspond to equal adjustments made to the first read voltage and to the second read voltage, such as by equally incrementing each of the trial values 161-165 and the trial values 191-195 for each set of read voltages. As another example, a step size of the second read voltage may be determined as a function of the step size of the first read voltage, such as a linear function (e.g., a constant scaling) or a non-linear function (e.g., an exponential scaling).

Iteratively adjusting the first read voltage and the second read voltage to form the sets of read voltages may include forming a first set of read voltages that includes an initial value of the first read voltage (e.g., trial value 191) and that includes an initial value of the second read voltage (e.g., trial value 161). A first offset may be applied to the initial value of the first read voltage to generate a first adjusted value of the first read voltage (e.g., trial value 192). A second offset may be applied to the initial value of the second read voltage to generate a first adjusted value of the second read voltage (e.g., trial value 162). A second set of read voltages may be formed that includes the first adjusted value of the first read voltage and the first adjusted value of the second read voltage. A third set of read voltages may be formed by adjusting the first and second read voltages to form second adjusted values (e.g., trial value 193 and trial value 163) by applying offsets to the first adjusted values. A fourth set of read voltages may be formed by adjusting the first and second read voltages to form third adjusted values (e.g., trial value 194 and trial value 164) by applying offsets to the second adjusted values. A fifth set of read voltages may be formed by adjusting the first and second read voltages to form fourth adjusted values (e.g., trial value 195 and trial value 165) by applying offsets to the third adjusted values.

First representations of data are read from a logical page in the non-volatile memory according to the sets of read voltages, at 1204. The first representations of the data may correspond to multiple values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage. For example, one of the first representations of the data may correspond to the set of read voltages {trial value 191, trial value 161} and another of the first representations of the data may correspond to the set of read voltages {trial value 192, trial value 162}. The first representations of the data may correspond to the representations 880-882 of FIG. 8.

To illustrate, reading the first representations of the data from the logical page according to the sets of read voltages may include generating a first representation of the data according to a first set of read voltages (e.g., representation 880) and generating a second representation of the data according to a second set of read voltages (e.g., representation 882). The first representation may be generated by sensing a group of storage elements using the first value of the first read voltage of the first set of read voltages to generate first sensing data, sensing the group of storage elements using the second value of the second read voltage of the first set of read voltages to generate second sensing data, and performing a logical operation, such as a logical OR operation and a logical NOT operation as described with respect to FIG. 8, on the first sensing data and the second sensing data to generate the first representation of the data, such as described with respect to Table 1 and/or FIG. 8. The second representation of the data may be generated according to a second set of read voltages by sensing the group of storage elements using the first value of the first read voltage of the second set of read voltages to generate third sensing data, sensing the group of storage elements using the second value of the second read voltage of the second set of read voltages to generate fourth sensing data, and performing a logical operation on the third sensing data and the fourth sensing data to generate the second representation of the data.

The first representations of the data may be digitally stored in a memory, at 1206. For example, the first representations, such as the stored representations 810 of FIG. 8 or FIG. 9, may be stored into the memory 152 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8. The first representations of the data may be converted from a first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences to a second mapping that includes fewer bits per bit sequence than the first mapping. To illustrate, the stored representations 810 of FIG. 8 may be re-mapped by the mapping converter 902 of FIG. 9 to produce the re-mapped data 920. However, in some implementations the first representations of the data are not re-mapped.

Second representations of the data are generated based on the first representations, at 1208. The second representations correspond to adjusting the first read voltage and the second read voltage. Generating the second representations of the data may include generating a first trial value of the data corresponding to the first read voltage having a first voltage value and the second read voltage having a second voltage value and generating a second trial value of the data corresponding to the first read voltage having a third voltage value and the second read voltage having the second voltage value. For example, the second representations of data may correspond to the multiple representations 814 generated by the read simulator 802 of FIG. 8.

A value of the first read voltage is selected based on a comparison of syndrome weights corresponding to the second representations, at 1210. For example, the value of the first read voltage may be selected by the read voltage update engine 140 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8. To illustrate, selecting the value of the first read voltage may include inputting the first trial value of the data to an ECC decoder (e.g., the decoder 126 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8) and receiving a first syndrome weight from the ECC decoder. The first syndrome weight may be associated with a first number of errors corresponding to the first trial value of the data. The second trial value of the data may be input to the ECC decoder and a second syndrome weight may be received from the ECC decoder. The second syndrome weight may be associated with a second number of errors corresponding to the second trial value of the data. The value of the first read voltage may be selected to be the first voltage value in response to the first syndrome weight being a lowest of the syndrome weights. For example, when a first set of voltages is used to generate a first representation of the data that results in the first syndrome weight, and the first syndrome weight is the lowest of the syndrome weights, the voltage values in the first set of voltages may be selected to be the updated values of the read voltages. As an alternative, the value of the first read voltage may be selected to be the third voltage value in response to the second syndrome weight being the lowest of the syndrome weights. For example, when a second set of voltages is used to generate a second representation of the data that results in the second syndrome weight, and the second syndrome weight is the lowest of the syndrome weights, the voltage values in the second set of voltages may be selected to be the updated values of the read voltages.

In some embodiments, each syndrome weight of a first set of syndrome weights may be associated with a corresponding adjusted value of the first read voltage and may be based on the second representations of the data. A first interpolated syndrome weight may be generated based on the first set of syndrome weights, such as by the interpolation filter 1102 of FIG. 11. A value of the first read voltage may be selected based on a voltage associated with the first interpolated syndrome weight. For example, generating the first interpolated syndrome weight may include upsampling the first set of syndrome weights to generate upsampled data (e.g., as depicted in graph 1160 of FIG. 11), applying a low-pass filter to the upsampled data to generate interpolation data (e.g., as depicted in graph 1180 of FIG. 11), and locating a smallest interpolation data value in the interpolation data. For example, the peak detector 1114 of FIG. 11 may determine the output read voltage 1116 corresponding to the interpolated syndrome weight 1182. As described with respect to FIG. 11, the interpolation filter may be selected from a set of multiple interpolation filters based on the first set of syndrome weights by selecting a first interpolation filter from the set of multiple interpolation filters in response to the first set of syndrome weights matching a first pattern of syndrome weights or selecting a second interpolation filter from the set of multiple interpolation filters in response to the first set of syndrome weights not matching the first pattern of syndrome weights.

Thus, the method 1200 enables use of the first representations of the data to generate and test second representations of the data and to select the read voltages that result in the fewest estimated errors without fully decoding any of the data representations. Latency due to data transfer from the non-volatile memory to the controller may be reduced as compared to a device that reads all tested data representations from a memory to compare error rates. Latency due to error detection and correction may also be reduced by using syndrome weights as compared to a device that fully decodes each tested data representation.

FIG. 13 illustrates a particular embodiment of a method 1300 of updating a set of read voltages. The method 1300 may be performed in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory. For example, the method 1300 may be performed by the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8.

The method 1300 includes iteratively adjusting a first read voltage and a second read voltage to form sets of read voltages, at 1302. Each of the sets of read voltages includes a first value of the first read voltage and a second value of the second read voltage. For example, the set of read voltages may correspond to the sets 870-872 of FIG. 8.

First representations of data are read from a logical page in the non-volatile memory according to the sets of read voltages, at 1304. The first representations of the data correspond to multiple values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage. For example, the first representations may correspond to the representations 880-882 of FIG. 8.

The first representations of the data are stored in a memory, at 1306. For example, the first representations may be digitally stored in the memory 152 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8. The first representations may correspond to the stored representations 810 of FIG. 8 or FIG. 9.

The first representations of the data are converted from a first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences to a second mapping that includes fewer bits per bit sequence than the first mapping to generate a re-mapped representation of the data, at 1308. In a particular implementation, the bit sequences of the first mapping may correspond to a Gray code and the bit sequences of the second mapping correspond to a binary code, such as in the example described with respect to Table 2.

Second representations of the data are generated based on the re-mapped representation of the data, at 1310. The second representations may correspond to adjusting the first read voltage and the second read voltage. For example, the second representations may be generated by the read simulator 802 of FIG. 8 and may correspond to the multiple representations 814 of FIG. 8.

A value of the first read voltage is selected based on ECC related information corresponding to the second representations, at 1312. For example, as described with respect to FIGS. 1 and 8, the ECC related information may include a number of corrected errors, a length of time to decode, a syndrome weight, a number of bit flips detected during decoding, one or more ECC metrics, or any combination thereof A value of the first read voltage that corresponds to a lowest occurrence of errors and/or lowest (actual or estimated) bit error rate may be selected.

Converting the first representations of the data from the first mapping to the second mapping may by performed by the mapping converter 902 of FIG. 9. For example, a first bit sequence (e.g., the input bit sequence 910 of FIG. 9) may be generated based on a first bit index. The first bit sequence may be formed by concatenating the bit value that is at the first bit index in each of the first representations. The first bit sequence may correspond to a first threshold voltage range of a storage element according to the first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences, such as described with respect to the mapping 892 of FIG. 8.

A second bit sequence, such as the output bit sequence 912 of FIG. 9, may be generated that indicates the first threshold voltage range of the storage element according to the second mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences. The second bit sequence corresponds to the first bit index of the re-mapped representation of the data. For example, the bit value at bit index ‘0’ of Representation 1 in FIG. 9 may be concatenated with the bit value at bit index ‘0’ of Representation 2 and with the bit value at bit index ‘0’ of each of the other representations 810 illustrated in FIG. 9 to form the input bit sequence 910. The resulting output bit sequence 912 may be assigned to the same bit index (i.e., bit index ‘0’) of the re-mapped data 920. Generating the second bit sequence may include performing a logical operation on the bits of the first bit sequence, such as by the mapping circuit 906. As an alternative, generating the second bit sequence may include performing a table lookup operation that uses the first bit sequence as an input, such as at the lookup table 904.

The first representations of the data may be checked for bit sequences that are not valid according to the first mapping, such as by the mapping checker 1002 of FIG. 10. For example, a first bit sequence may be based on a value of a first bit in each of the first representations of the data, such as the input bit sequence 910 of FIG. 9. In response to determining that the first bit sequence is an invalid bit sequence of the first mapping, a valid bit sequence of the first mapping may be selected based on a number of bit differences between the first bit sequence and the valid bit sequence. To illustrate, the number of bit differences between the first bit sequence and the valid bit sequence may be a Hamming distance. The selected valid bit sequence may correspond to the output bit sequence 1012 of FIG. 10.

The ECC information may include a first set of syndrome weights. For example, selecting the value of the first read voltage may be performed according to a process that includes generating the first set of syndrome weights. Each syndrome weight of the first set of syndrome weights may be associated with a corresponding adjusted value of the first read voltage and may be based on the second representations of the data. A first interpolated syndrome weight may be generated based on the first set of syndrome weights, such as the interpolated syndrome weight 1182 representing a minimum value in the interpolation data 1112 of FIG. 11. The value of the first read voltage may be selected based on a voltage associated with the first interpolated syndrome weight, such as the output read voltage 1116 corresponding to the interpolated syndrome weight 1182 of FIG. 11.

As described with respect to FIG. 11, generating the first interpolated syndrome weight based on the first set of syndrome weights may include arranging the first set of syndrome weights as a data set that includes values of syndrome weight that correspond to values of the first read voltage (e.g., as illustrated in the graph 1140). The data set may be applied to an input of an interpolation filter (e.g., the interpolation filter 1102) that generates an interpolated data set at an output of the interpolation filter. The interpolated data set includes interpolated values of syndrome weight. A smallest value of syndrome weight in the interpolated data set may be detected by the peak detector 1114 and may correspond to the first interpolated syndrome weight 1182. Selecting the value of the first read voltage may include identifying the smallest value of syndrome weight in the interpolated data set and selecting the value of the first read voltage that corresponds to the smallest value of syndrome weight, such as described with respect to the output read voltage 1116 of FIG. 11.

Although various components depicted herein are illustrated as block components and described in general terms, such components may include one or more microprocessors, state machines, or other circuits configured to enable the read voltage update engine 140 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8 to instruct reading of data from the non-volatile memory using multiple trial values of each read voltage and to select an updated read voltage based on ECC related information. For example, the update engine 140 may represent physical components, such as hardware controllers, state machines, logic circuits, or other structures, to enable comparisons between ECC related information resulting from reading data using each trial value to select a trial value that corresponds to a lowest estimated or actual error rate as compared to the actual or estimated error rates corresponding to the other trial values. In addition or alternatively, such components may include one or more microprocessors, state machines, or other circuits configured to enable the read simulator 802 of FIG. 8 to generate the multiple representations 814 of FIG. 8. For example, the read simulator 802 may represent physical components, such as hardware controllers, state machines, logic circuits, or other structures, to enable reading all or parts of the stored representations 810 and to generate, based on a selected set of read voltages, a representation of data that would be read from the non-volatile memory using the selected set of read voltages but without reading the data from the non-volatile memory using the selected set of read voltages.

The read voltage update engine 140 may be implemented using a microprocessor or microcontroller programmed instruct reading of data from the non-volatile memory using multiple trial values of each read voltage and to select an updated read voltage based on ECC related information, such as by comparing ECC related information resulting from reading data using each trial value to select a trial value that corresponds to a lowest estimated or actual error rate as compared to the actual or estimated error rates corresponding to the other trial values. In a particular embodiment, the read voltage update engine 140 includes a processor executing instructions that are stored at the non-volatile memory 104. Alternatively, or in addition, executable instructions that are executed by the processor may be stored at a separate memory location that is not part of the non-volatile memory 104, such as at a read-only memory (ROM) or at the memory 152.

In a particular embodiment, the data storage device 102 of FIG. 1 or FIG. 8 may be implemented in a portable device configured to be selectively coupled to one or more external devices. However, in other embodiments, the data storage device 102 may be attached or embedded within one or more host devices, such as within a housing of a host communication device. For example, the data storage device 102 may be within a packaged apparatus such as a wireless telephone, a personal digital assistant (PDA), a gaming device or console, a portable navigation device, or other device that uses internal non-volatile memory.

The illustrations of the embodiments described herein are intended to provide a general understanding of the various embodiments. Other embodiments may be utilized and derived from the disclosure, such that structural and logical substitutions and changes may be made without departing from the scope of the disclosure. This disclosure is intended to cover any and all subsequent adaptations or variations of various embodiments.

Semiconductor memory devices include volatile memory devices, such as dynamic random access memory (“DRAM”) or static random access memory (“SRAM”) devices, non-volatile memory devices, such as resistive random access memory (“ReRAM”), electrically erasable programmable read only memory (“EEPROM”), flash memory (which can also be considered a subset of EEPROM), ferroelectric random access memory (“FRAM”), and magnetoresistive random access memory (“MRAM”), and other semiconductor elements capable of storing information. Each type of memory device may have different configurations. For example, flash memory devices may be configured in a NAND or a NOR configuration.

The memory devices can be formed from passive and/or active elements, in any combinations. By way of non-limiting example, passive semiconductor memory elements include ReRAM device elements, which in some embodiments include a resistivity switching storage element, such as an anti-fuse, phase change material, etc., and optionally a steering element, such as a diode, etc. Further by way of non-limiting example, active semiconductor memory elements include EEPROM and flash memory device elements, which in some embodiments include elements containing a charge storage region, such as a floating gate, conductive nanoparticles, or a charge storage dielectric material.

Multiple memory elements may be configured so that they are connected in series or so that each element is individually accessible. By way of non-limiting example, flash memory devices in a NAND configuration (NAND memory) typically contain memory elements connected in series. A NAND memory array may be configured so that the array is composed of multiple strings of memory in which a string is composed of multiple memory elements sharing a single bit line and accessed as a group. Alternatively, memory elements may be configured so that each element is individually accessible, e.g., a NOR memory array. NAND and NOR memory configurations are exemplary, and memory elements may be otherwise configured.

The semiconductor memory elements located within and/or over a substrate may be arranged in two or three dimensions, such as a two dimensional memory structure or a three dimensional memory structure.

In a two dimensional memory structure, the semiconductor memory elements are arranged in a single plane or a single memory device level. Typically, in a two dimensional memory structure, memory elements are arranged in a plane (e.g., in an x-z direction plane) which extends substantially parallel to a major surface of a substrate that supports the memory elements. The substrate may be a wafer over or in which the layer of the memory elements are formed or it may be a carrier substrate which is attached to the memory elements after they are formed. As a non-limiting example, the substrate may include a semiconductor such as silicon.

The memory elements may be arranged in the single memory device level in an ordered array, such as in a plurality of rows and/or columns. However, the memory elements may be arrayed in non-regular or non-orthogonal configurations. The memory elements may each have two or more electrodes or contact lines, such as bit lines and word lines.

A three dimensional memory array is arranged so that memory elements occupy multiple planes or multiple memory device levels, thereby forming a structure in three dimensions (i.e., in the x, y and z directions, where the y direction is substantially perpendicular and the x and z directions are substantially parallel to the major surface of the substrate).

As a non-limiting example, a three dimensional memory structure may be vertically arranged as a stack of multiple two dimensional memory device levels. As another non-limiting example, a three dimensional memory array may be arranged as multiple vertical columns (e.g., columns extending substantially perpendicular to the major surface of the substrate, i.e., in the y direction) with each column having multiple memory elements in each column. The columns may be arranged in a two dimensional configuration, e.g., in an x-z plane, resulting in a three dimensional arrangement of memory elements with elements on multiple vertically stacked memory planes. Other configurations of memory elements in three dimensions can also constitute a three dimensional memory array.

By way of non-limiting example, in a three dimensional NAND memory array, the memory elements may be coupled together to form a NAND string within a single horizontal (e.g., x-z) memory device levels. Alternatively, the memory elements may be coupled together to form a vertical NAND string that traverses across multiple horizontal memory device levels. Other three dimensional configurations can be envisioned wherein some NAND strings contain memory elements in a single memory level while other strings contain memory elements which span through multiple memory levels. Three dimensional memory arrays may also be designed in a NOR configuration and in a ReRAM configuration.

Typically, in a monolithic three dimensional memory array, one or more memory device levels are formed above a single substrate. Optionally, the monolithic three dimensional memory array may also have one or more memory layers at least partially within the single substrate. As a non-limiting example, the substrate may include a semiconductor such as silicon. In a monolithic three dimensional array, the layers constituting each memory device level of the array are typically formed on the layers of the underlying memory device levels of the array. However, layers of adjacent memory device levels of a monolithic three dimensional memory array may be shared or have intervening layers between memory device levels.

Then again, two dimensional arrays may be formed separately and then packaged together to form a non-monolithic memory device having multiple layers of memory. For example, non-monolithic stacked memories can be constructed by forming memory levels on separate substrates and then stacking the memory levels atop each other. The substrates may be thinned or removed from the memory device levels before stacking, but as the memory device levels are initially formed over separate substrates, the resulting memory arrays are not monolithic three dimensional memory arrays. Further, multiple two dimensional memory arrays or three dimensional memory arrays (monolithic or non-monolithic) may be formed on separate chips and then packaged together to form a stacked-chip memory device.

Associated circuitry is typically included for operation of the memory elements and for communication with the memory elements. As non-limiting examples, memory devices may have circuitry used for controlling and driving memory elements to accomplish functions such as programming and reading. This associated circuitry may be on the same substrate as the memory elements and/or on a separate substrate. For example, a controller for memory read-write operations may be located on a separate controller chip and/or on the same substrate as the memory elements.

One of skill in the art will recognize that this disclosure is not limited to the two dimensional and three dimensional exemplary structures described but covers all relevant memory structures within the spirit and scope of the disclosure as described herein and as understood by one of skill in the art. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method of updating a set of read voltages, the method comprising: in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory, performing: iteratively adjusting a first read voltage and a second read voltage to form sets of read voltages, wherein each of the sets of read voltages includes a first value of the first read voltage and a second value of the second read voltage, wherein an adjustment of the second read voltage is a function of an adjustment of the first read voltage; reading first representations of data from a logical page in the non-volatile memory according to the sets of read voltages, the first representations of the data corresponding to multiple values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage; storing the first representations of the data in a memory; generating second representations of the data based on the first representations, the second representations corresponding to adjusting the first read voltage and the second read voltage; and selecting a value of the first read voltage based on a comparison of syndrome weights corresponding to the second representations.
 2. The method of claim 1, further comprising converting the first representations of the data from a first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences to a second mapping that includes fewer bits per bit sequence than the first mapping.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein iteratively adjusting the first read voltage and the second read voltage to form the sets of read voltages includes: forming a first set of read voltages that includes an initial value of the first read voltage and that includes an initial value of the second read voltage; applying a first offset to the initial value of the first read voltage to generate a first adjusted value of the first read voltage; applying a second offset to the initial value of the second read voltage to generate a first adjusted value of the second read voltage; and forming a second set of read voltages that includes the first adjusted value of the first read voltage and the first adjusted value of the second read voltage.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein reading the first representations of the data from the logical page according to the sets of read voltages includes: generating a first representation of the data according to a first set of read voltages by: sensing a group of storage elements using the first value of the first read voltage of the first set of read voltages to generate first sensing data; sensing the group of storage elements using the second value of the second read voltage of the first set of read voltages to generate second sensing data; and performing a logical operation on the first sensing data and the second sensing data to generate the first representation of the data; and generating a second representation of the data according to a second set of read voltages by: sensing the group of storage elements using the first value of the first read voltage of the second set of read voltages to generate third sensing data; sensing the group of storage elements using the second value of the second read voltage of the second set of read voltages to generate fourth sensing data; and performing a logical operation on the third sensing data and the fourth sensing data to generate the second representation of the data.
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein generating the second representations of the data includes: generating a first trial value of the data corresponding to the first read voltage having a first voltage value and the second read voltage having a second voltage value; and generating a second trial value of the data corresponding to the first read voltage having a third voltage value and the second read voltage having the second voltage value; and wherein selecting the value of the first read voltage includes: inputting the first trial value of the data to an ECC decoder; receiving a first syndrome weight from the ECC decoder, the first syndrome weight associated with a first number of errors corresponding to the first trial value of the data; inputting the second trial value of the data to the ECC decoder; receiving a second syndrome weight from the ECC decoder, the second syndrome weight associated with a second number of errors corresponding to the second trial value of the data; and selecting the value of the first read voltage to be the first voltage value in response to the first syndrome weight being a lowest of the syndrome weights or selecting the value of the first read voltage to be the third voltage value in response to the second syndrome weight being the lowest of the syndrome weights.
 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the syndrome weights form a first set of syndrome weights, wherein each syndrome weight of the first set of syndrome weights is associated with a corresponding adjusted value of the first read voltage and is based on the second representations of the data, the method further comprising: generating a first interpolated syndrome weight based on the first set of syndrome weights; and selecting a value of the first read voltage based on a voltage associated with the first interpolated syndrome weight.
 7. The method of claim 6, wherein generating the first interpolated syndrome weight includes upsampling the first set of syndrome weights to generate upsampled data, applying a low-pass filter to the upsampled data to generate interpolation data, and locating a smallest interpolation data value in the interpolation data, wherein the smallest interpolation data value is a value in the interpolation data that is smaller than any other value in the interpolation data and that is located by a peak detector operating on the interpolation data.
 8. The method of claim 6, further comprising selecting the interpolation filter from a set of multiple interpolation filters based on the first set of syndrome weights by selecting a first interpolation filter from the set of multiple interpolation filters in response to the first set of syndrome weights matching a first pattern of syndrome weights or selecting a second interpolation filter from the set of multiple interpolation filters in response to the first set of syndrome weights not matching the first pattern of syndrome weights.
 9. A method of updating a set of read voltages, the method comprising: in a data storage device including a controller and a non-volatile memory, performing: iteratively adjusting a first read voltage and a second read voltage to form sets of read voltages, wherein each of the sets of read voltages includes a first value of the first read voltage and a second value of the second read voltage; reading first representations of data from a logical page in the non-volatile memory according to the sets of read voltages, the first representations of the data corresponding to multiple values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage; storing the first representations of the data in a memory; converting the first representations of the data from a first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences to a second mapping that includes fewer bits per bit sequence than the first mapping to generate a re-mapped representation of the data; generating second representations of the data based on the re-mapped representation of the data; and selecting a value of the first read voltage based on ECC related information corresponding to the second representations.
 10. The method of claim 9, wherein a first bit sequence is based on a value of a first bit in each of the first representations of the data, the method further comprising in response to determining that the first bit sequence is an invalid bit sequence of the first mapping, selecting a valid bit sequence of the first mapping based on a number of bit differences between the first bit sequence and the valid bit sequence.
 11. The method of claim 10, wherein the number of bit differences between the first bit sequence and the valid bit sequence is a Hamming distance.
 12. The method of claim 9, wherein the bit sequences of the first mapping correspond to a Gray code and the bit sequences of the second mapping correspond to a binary code.
 13. The method of claim 9, wherein converting the first representations of the data from the first mapping to the second mapping includes: generating a first bit sequence corresponding to a first bit index, the first bit sequence formed by concatenating the bit value that is at the first bit index in each of the first representations, wherein the first bit sequence corresponds to a first threshold voltage range of a storage element according to the first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences; generating a second bit sequence that indicates the first threshold voltage range of the storage element according to the second mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences and that corresponds to the first bit index of the re-mapped representation of the data, wherein generating the second bit sequence includes performing a logical operation on the bits of the first bit sequence or includes performing a table lookup operation that uses the first bit sequence as an input.
 14. The method of claim 9, wherein the ECC information includes a first set of syndrome weights, and wherein selecting the value of the first read voltage includes: generating the first set of syndrome weights, wherein each syndrome weight of the first set of syndrome weights is associated with a corresponding adjusted value of the first read voltage and is based on the second representations of the data; generating a first interpolated syndrome weight based on the first set of syndrome weights; and selecting a value of the first read voltage based on a voltage associated with the first interpolated syndrome weight.
 15. The method of claim 14, wherein generating the first interpolated syndrome weight based on the first set of syndrome weights includes: arranging the first set of syndrome weights as a data set that includes values of syndrome weight that correspond to values of the first read voltage; and applying the data set to an input of an interpolation filter that generates an interpolated data set at an output of the interpolation filter, wherein the interpolated data set includes interpolated values of syndrome weight, wherein a smallest value of syndrome weight in the interpolated data set corresponds to the first interpolated syndrome weight.
 16. The method of claim 15, wherein selecting the value of the first read voltage includes identifying the smallest value of syndrome weight in the interpolated data set and selecting the value of the first read voltage that corresponds to the smallest value of syndrome weight.
 17. A data storage device comprising: a non-volatile memory; and a controller coupled to the non-volatile memory, wherein the controller is configured to adjust a first read voltage and a second read voltage to form sets of read voltages, wherein each of the sets of read voltages includes a first value of the first read voltage and a second value of the second read voltage, wherein the controller is configured to store first representations of the data into a memory, the first representations read from a logical page in the non-volatile memory according to the sets of read voltages, the first representations of the data corresponding to multiple values of the first read voltage and the second read voltage, wherein the controller is further configured to generate second representations of the data based on the first representations, the second representations corresponding to adjusting the first read voltage and the second read voltage, and wherein the controller is configured to select a value of the first read voltage based on a comparison of syndrome weights corresponding to the second representations.
 18. The data storage device of claim 17, wherein the controller is configured to convert the first representations of the data in the memory from a first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences to a second mapping that includes fewer bits per bit sequence than the first mapping.
 19. The data storage device of claim 17, wherein the controller is configured to select the value of the first read voltage based on a voltage associated with a first interpolated syndrome weight that is based on the syndrome weights.
 20. The data storage device of claim 19, further comprising an interpolation filter, and wherein the controller is configured to apply the interpolation filter to the syndrome weights to generate interpolation data.
 21. A data storage device comprising: a non-volatile memory; and a controller coupled to the non-volatile memory, wherein the controller is configured to update a first read voltage by generating multiple sets of read voltages to read first representations of data from a logical page in the non-volatile memory, wherein the controller is configured to convert the first representations of the data from a first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences to a second mapping that includes fewer bits per bit sequence than the first mapping to generate a re-mapped representation of the data, wherein the controller is configured to store the re-mapped representation of the data into a controller memory, and wherein the controller is configured to update the first read voltage based on error correction coding (ECC) related information, the ECC related information responsive to second representations of the data that are based on the re-mapped representation of the data, wherein each of the sets of read voltages includes a first value of the first read voltage that is distinct from the first values of the first read voltage in the other sets of read voltages, and wherein each of the sets of read voltages includes a second value of a second read voltage that is distinct from the second values of the second read voltages in the other sets of read voltages.
 22. The data storage device of claim 21, wherein a first bit sequence is based on a value of a first bit in each of the first representations of the data, and wherein in response to determining that the first bit sequence is an invalid bit sequence of the first mapping, the controller is configured to select a valid bit sequence of the first mapping based on a number of bit differences between the first bit sequence and the valid bit sequence.
 23. The data storage device of claim 21, wherein the bit sequences of the first mapping correspond to a Gray code and the bit sequences of the second mapping correspond to a binary code.
 24. The data storage device of claim 21, wherein the controller is configured to generate, using the re-mapped representation of the data, the second representations of the data as multiple trial values of the data, the multiple trial values including a first trial value of the data corresponding to the first read voltage having a first voltage value and the second read voltage having a second voltage value, the multiple trial values further including a second trial value of the data corresponding to the first read voltage having a third voltage value and the second read voltage having the second voltage value, and wherein the controller is configured to receive multiple syndrome weights corresponding to the multiple trial values, the multiple syndrome weights including a first syndrome weight received from an ECC decoder and associated with a first number of errors corresponding to the first trial value of the data, the multiple syndrome weights further including a second syndrome weight received from the ECC decoder and associated with a second number of errors corresponding to the second trial value of the data.
 25. The data storage device of claim 24, wherein the controller is configured to update the first read voltage to have the first voltage value in response to the first syndrome weight being a lowest syndrome weight of the multiple syndrome weights or to update the first read voltage to have the third voltage value in response to the second syndrome weight being the lowest syndrome weight of the multiple syndrome weights.
 26. The data storage device of claim 21, wherein the controller is configured to generate a first bit sequence corresponding to a first bit index, the first bit sequence formed by concatenating the bit value that is at the first bit index in each of the first representations, wherein the first bit sequence indicates a first threshold voltage range of a storage element according to the first mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences, wherein the controller is configured to generate a second bit sequence that indicates the first threshold voltage range of the storage element according to the second mapping of threshold voltage ranges to bit sequences, wherein the controller is configured to assign the second bit sequence to the first bit index of the re-mapped representation of the data, and wherein the controller is configured to perform a logical operation on the bits of the first bit sequence or to perform a table lookup operation that uses the first bit sequence as an input to generate the second bit sequence. 